ATIYA K. REEVES v. WASHINGTON METROPOLITAN AREA TRANSIT AUTHORITY

135 A.3d 807, 2016 D.C. App. LEXIS 99, 2016 WL 1536733
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 14, 2016
Docket15-CV-711
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 135 A.3d 807 (ATIYA K. REEVES v. WASHINGTON METROPOLITAN AREA TRANSIT AUTHORITY) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
ATIYA K. REEVES v. WASHINGTON METROPOLITAN AREA TRANSIT AUTHORITY, 135 A.3d 807, 2016 D.C. App. LEXIS 99, 2016 WL 1536733 (D.C. 2016).

Opinion

*809 REID, Senior Judge:

In this personal injury, slip and fall case appellant, Atiya K. Reeves, appeals the trial court’s order granting summary judgment and the court’s order denying her motion for reconsideration'. She claims, in essence, that the trial court erred by ruling in favor of appellee, Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority (“WMA-TA”), as a matter of law with respect to her claim of negligence. For the reasons stated below, we vacate the orders of the trial court and remand this case for further proceedings.

FACTUAL SUMMARY

The record reveals that on February 24, 2011, at around 5:30 pm, Ms. Reeves slipped and fell on the floor just inside the pay gates at the Archives-Navy Memorial-Penn Quarter Metro station (the “Archives Metro station”). She. filed a negligence complaint against WMATA on February 12, 2014, alleging, inter alia, that her “fall was the direct and proximate result of the unsafe and hazardous condition of the Metrorail station’s floor tiles,” and that WMATÁ’s failure “to warn or advise [her] of the unsafe and hazardous condition” was the proximate cause of her fall and resulting injuries. Following discovery, WMATA filed a. motion for summary judgment, arguing (1) “there is no evidence of an unreasonably dangerous condition,” and (2) “no reasonable jury could find in favor of [Ms. Reeves] under a failure to warn theory.” ■

Attached to WMATA’s motion were excerpts from the deposition testimony of Ms. Reeves’ engineering expert, Dr. Gregory Harrison, excerpts from Ms. Reeves’ deposition testimony, and a statement of undisputed facts. WMATA asserted that Dr. Harrison “rejected any claim that warning signs could have led to a different outcome here.” 1 However, Dr. Harrison also testified that as floors age, they “lose their slip resistance characteristics.” He explained that at a minimum, for a floor surface to provide adequate slip resistance for safety purposes, the coefficient of friction 2 of the floor surface should exceed .45. Dr. Harrison’s expert opinion, derived from testing and his review of the record in this case, was that the coefficient of friction for the Archives Metro station floor surface around where Ms. Reeves fell was “well below .5” within “a number range of .3 to .35.” In laymen’s terms, he described the station floor’s “dry condition [as] anything but slip resistantt,] and when wet it’s treacherous.” 3

Ms. Reeves filed an opposition to WMA-TA’s motion, as well as a motion for reconsideration after the trial court granted WMATA’s motion for summary judgment. *810 Attached to Ms. Reeves’ opposition memorandum was a “statement of material facts for which there is a genuine issue,” excerpts from her deposition, her affidavit, the affidavit of Dr. Harrison, and a television news report. She attached to her motion for reconsideration excerpts from her deposition, her supplemental affidavit, excerpts from the deposition testimony of WMATA’s station manager at the time of the incident (Lawrence D. Walker), and WMATA’s answers to her interrogatories.

During her deposition, Ms. Reeves testified that on the day of her fall, she took her umbrella with her to work because it was “[a] rainy day.’’ 4 She remembered that when she left work and walked to the Archives Metro station at around 5:30 pm there was “a light rain” that required her and others around her to use them umbrellas. She took an elevator to get into the station, exiting at the mezzanine level. After getting out of the elevator, she walked towards the fare gates, and then swiped her “Smart Card” to go through. While walking, she was looking “[straight ahead” and she was not walking with anyone, listening to music, or using her phone in any other way. She did not see any caution signs in the station, nor did she notice whether the floor was wet or dry. 5 After she took a few steps in the paid area, she fell down. 6 It was only at that point that she “noticed traces of water.” Ms. Reeves further declared in her affidavit that the “traces of water ... formed trails or lines that looked like it had been tracked in on peoples’ feet as they entered the Archives metro station from the outside.” She “also noticed that [her] overcoat was significantly wet in the area of [her] buttocks” after her fall.

The news report by the local NBC affiliate indicated that one of WMATA’s board members (the then-current mayor of Alexandria, Bill Euille) fell at a metro station several months prior to Ms. Reeves’ fall. The end of the report stated that “Metro has already looked at improving the tile floors at its 86 stations,” and according to the report, Mr. Euille remarked that “it may be time to revisit the issue.” In his affidavit Dr. Harrison opined, “to a reasonable degree of professional and engineering certainty,” that since WMATA knew “that the quarry tiles on the floors of the station were slippery when wet, WMATA had a duty of reasonable care to properly warn or advise pedestrians of the unsafe and hazardous condition of the wet floor tiles,” and that WMATA had breached that duty by failing to warn when it “peculiarly knew, or should have known, in the exercise o[f] reasonable care, that the floor tiles would be wet on February 24, 2011 when it had been raining all day and pedestrians would track water into the Archives [S]tation.”

*811 In granting WMATA’s motion for summary judgment, the trial court cited Washington Metro. Area Transit Auth. v. Barksdale-Showell, 965 A.2d 16, 24-25 (D.C.2009), and stated in part, “[T]his member of the court cannot conclude that the water tracked into a metro station by its patrons (including the plaintiff) on a rainy day during rush hour constitutes a hidden or otherwise discrete danger that was well known to only .the defendant, and not the plaintiff.” The court repeated its above-mentioned sentence in denying Ms. Reeves’ motion for reconsideration, but did not repeat the citation to Barksdale-Sho-well. The trial court also concluded that WMATA had no duty-to warn because Ms. Reeves’ “failure to appreciate her surroundings under the[ ] circumstances does not require Defendant WMATA to warn [Ms. Reeves] about an obvious risk.” Ms. Reeves noticed an appeal.

THE PARTIES’ APPELLATE ARGUMENTS

In this appeal, Ms. Reeves argues that the trial court erred in granting summary judgment because there was evidence in the record indicating that the wet station floor posed a danger that was not “open and obvious” to Ms. Reeves, that the danger was not equally well known to both parties, that WMATA had constructive notice of the danger, and that WMATA’s failure to warn was the proximate cause of her fall. 7 WMATA contends, by contrast, that the trial court correctly found that WMATA had no duty to warn Ms. Reeves of the wet station floor because the wet station floor was not a dangerous condition, and because in any event Ms.

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Bluebook (online)
135 A.3d 807, 2016 D.C. App. LEXIS 99, 2016 WL 1536733, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atiya-k-reeves-v-washington-metropolitan-area-transit-authority-dc-2016.